It claims Mr Kenny offered to use the “significant influence” of Ireland’s EU presidency in 2013 as a way to influence other member states.

The memo notes this offer was made “even tough technically Ireland is supposed to remain neutral in this role”.

According to the report the document also says: “The prime minister committed to using their EU presidency to achieve a positive outcome on the directive”.

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Fianna Fáil’s enterprise spokesperson Billy Kelleher has called for the government to clarify if it or its diplomatic services were used to lobby other EU member states on behalf of Facebook.

Mr Kenny has not yet responded to the claims made in the article.

The Observer reported that the documents appear to come from a court case taken against Facebook in the United States by an app developer called Six4Three.

Facebook said that it could not respond in detail as the documents are still under seal in court.

A statement said: “Like the other documents that were cherry-picked and released in violation of a court order last year, these by design tell one side of a story and omit important context.”

Independent.ie asked Facebook if it had requested that the Irish government undertake lobbying in the EU on its behalf.

Its spokesperson said: “We regularly meet with government stakeholders to explain how our services work and discuss topics relevant to our business.”

A government spokesperson said: “Ireland has always, and continues to, support high standards of data protection regulation at national and EU level, working with other member states to agree and now implement the GDPR.

He added: “Ireland’s Data Protection Commissioner is completely independent, has been given very large increases in staff and resources in recent years, and is highly regarded across Europe.”

A statement also said: “The Irish government has a good relationship with all major employers and major investors in Ireland. The relationship with Facebook is no more nor less close than with any other large firm.”